The union representing Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) workers wants the Crown corporation to compete with private cannabis retailers in the province.

Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) president Warren “Smokey” Thomas is calling upon the provincial government to run a needs assessment to determine the right number of brick-and-mortar pot shops.

He suggests the LCBO either be allowed to open new stand-alone cannabis stores to meet demand, or enter a third lottery to be held by the provincial regulator alongside new private applicants in order to obtain retail licences.

OPSEU has approximately 155,000 members across Ontario, including LCBO workers.

“Why is Doug Ford afraid of competition between public and private on cannabis? If he thinks competition works, then maybe this will be a good thing. Maybe we’ll squeeze out the black market faster,” Thomas told Yahoo Finance Canada. “He’s botched the cannabis file terribly.”

“The private sector has had more than a year to set up the legal cannabis system, but they failed at every turn,” Thomas said. “We still have far too few stores.”

Thomas points to British Columbia, where public and private cannabis stores co-exits. He said stores managed by the LCBO could also help win trust in Ontario communities that opted out of allowing private brick-and-mortar cannabis stores.

“You don’t have to worry about any nefarious players being involved because it’s publicly run,” Thomas said.

A spokesperson for Ontario Attorney General Doug Downey said the province is not looking to open physical cannabis stores.

“We firmly believe that government should not be in the cannabis retail business, particularly at a time when we are focused on lifting the province out overwhelming debt left behind after 15 years of the Liberal’s reckless spending and mismanagement,” Jenessa Crognali wrote in an emailed statement.